Kentucky voters defeat a measure intended to allow tax dollar support for private school education
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Kentucky voters on Tuesday rejected a ballot measure that was intended to allow state lawmakers to allocate public tax dollars to support students attending private or charter schools.
The defeat was a bitter setback for many Republican lawmakers and their allies who have supported funneling state dollars into private school education, only to be thwarted by the courts. The measure was put on the statewide ballot in an attempt to amend Kentucky’s constitution to remove that barrier.
Instead, the proposal was defeated at the polls in a signature victory for public school groups and the Bluegrass State’s most prominent Democrats: Gov. Andy Beshear and Lt. Gov. Jacqueline Coleman. They said tax dollars allocated for education should only go to public schools.
With no election for statewide office on the ballot — and Republican Donald Trump expected to carry Kentucky in the race for the White House — the school-choice measure was the most intensely debated issue of the campaign in the Bluegrass State. Advocates on both sides of the debate ran TV ads and mounted grassroots efforts to make their case in the high-stakes campaign.